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Trekking across frozen Lake Baikal in Siberia

A car trek ends in a puddle of open water in otherwise frozen Lake Baikal in Siberia, Russia. The fate of the car and passenger is unknown. .They are a group of five people: Justin Jin (Chinese-British), Heleen van Geest (Dutch), Nastya and Misha Martynov (Russian) and their Russian guide Arkady. .They pulled their sledges 80 km across the world's deepest lake, taking a break on Olkhon Island. They slept two nights on the ice in -15c. .Baikal, the world's largest lake by volume, contains one-fifth of the earth's fresh water and plunges to a depth of 1,637 metres..The lake is frozen from November to April, allowing people to cross by cars and lorries.

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Baikal_JIN_57.jpg
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Copyright 2008 by Justin Jin. All rights reserved.
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Crossing Baikal
A car trek ends in a puddle of open water in otherwise frozen Lake Baikal in Siberia, Russia. The fate of the car and passenger is unknown. .They are a group of five people: Justin Jin (Chinese-British), Heleen van Geest (Dutch), Nastya and Misha Martynov (Russian) and their Russian guide Arkady. .They pulled their sledges 80 km across the world's deepest lake, taking a break on Olkhon Island. They slept two nights on the ice in -15c. .Baikal, the world's largest lake by volume, contains one-fifth of the earth's fresh water and plunges to a depth of 1,637 metres..The lake is frozen from November to April, allowing people to cross by cars and lorries.